will college (and pro) football be gone in 20 years, I hope not. With the ever increasing size and speed of the players though I can see their point. 400 lb linemen who have 8% bodyfat, 270 lb linebackers, etc will be the norm in 20 years. hopefully they start looking into a WAY better safety gear and way better head protection. Talking stuff beyond carbon fiber composites and foam padded helmets. This is what's needed. There's only so much you can do when a player lowers his head unless you wanna put a HANS device on him like they do in NASCAR to force him to keep his head up. Lowering the head is just a natural instinct when making contact that's tough to overcome and, very unfortunately, it leads to concussions (for you and the guy you're hitting), paralysis, etc. They need to start R&D'ing better equipment and they needed to do so 5 years ago.
That's because some idiots go into a university setting and treat it like a trade school. The end game isn't to make a buck, it is to become a better educated person. If someone goes to school only to learn how to do a certain task, they will be irrelevant in 10 years. You need to learn how to read and write at an extremely high level, and learn how to reason, and develop logical problem solving skills.
The LSATs and MCATs are high level thinking exams that require an applicant to prove the can read, write, and reason at an extremely high level. They are not specific to a field of study, but rather test to see how well you think.
That is what college is there to prepare you to do. That is what college prepared me to do.
That's because some idiots go into a university setting and treat it like a trade school. The end game isn't to make a buck, it is to become a better educated person. If someone goes to school only to learn how to do a certain task, they will be irrelevant in 10 years. You need to learn how to read and write at an extremely high level, and learn how to reason, and develop logical problem solving skills.
The LSATs and MCATs are high level thinking exams that require an applicant to prove the can read, write, and reason at an extremely high level. They are not specific to a field of study, but rather test to see how well you think.
That is what college is there to prepare you to do. That is what college prepared me to do.
You want to make college football safer? There is another way called limited substitution football. A player plays both offense and defense. The size of the players will dramatically change. The size of players would change because of the conditioning required and the need to play multiple positions.
Meh.. I think you'd see the same number or increased number of injuries due to increased fatigue. Not too mention you'd be taking twice as many shots playing both sides of the ball.
Interpreting literature is one of the most helpful skills you can learn for the rest of your life. If you're unable to leverage that into something useful, you either didn't pay attention, had a bad teacher, or are very, very young.Those interpretation of literature courses I was required to take had nothing to do with logic. Math classes do have value, though, even if I'll never use statistics again. I got something out of one of my required science courses. But a lot of the hoops kids have to jump through aren't all that helpful in the long run.
In terms of adaptability, kids today are already far more prepared than any generation in history. We grew up in the technology age, which is something older generations didn't do.
Interpreting literature is one of the most helpful skills you can learn for the rest of your life. If you're unable to leverage that into something useful, you either didn't pay attention, had a bad teacher, or are very, very young.
Two thoughts:
Not all college degrees are equal. The "hard science" majors probably won't go to the on-line business.....pharmacy, medicine, nursing, engineering, any health-care related research area. Same could be reasoned with pre-law and law school, as well as computer science.
Lots of these degrees are being offered in online formats, particularly for people who are already doing some sort of work in a related field. The combination of online learning and real life experience is resulting in graduates who are prepared for their industry exams, but actually better prepared for their fields.
All of this may be true, but the Iowa Hawkeyes football team will still exist, and it will still play in Kinnick Stadium, and they will still wear black and gold. It just may be that they are not college students, but rather semi-pro, like a European club-team. In the end, the Tavern Hawks won't care, and I doubt the rest of us will stop watching either.
Go back to what Delany said about going to Division 3. If the university spun off football (& basketball) as semi-pro or club-teams, then the rest of the sports could/would go division 3, right? And then they could fade away if the enrollment shrank, and none of us would really care. (except for those of you who like rasslin)